Hutzler Bros. v. Taylor

230 A.2d 663, 247 Md. 228, 1967 Md. LEXIS 356
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 27, 1967
Docket[No. 396, September Term, 1966.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 230 A.2d 663 (Hutzler Bros. v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutzler Bros. v. Taylor, 230 A.2d 663, 247 Md. 228, 1967 Md. LEXIS 356 (Md. 1967).

Opinion

McWilliams, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Our determination of this appeal will depend, for the most part, on whether we agree with the trial judge’s holding that Mrs. Rebecca Timbres Taylor, when she fell and injured herself on the property of appellant (Hutzlers) in Towson, was an invitee rather than a licensee. The jury rendered a verdict of $7,000 in her favor and a verdict of $3,000 in favor of her husband, Richard R. Taylor. From the ensuing judgments Hutzlers has appealed. The facts, with minor exceptions, are undisputed. An occasional glance at the plat made a part of this opinion will make our recital of the facts easier to comprehend.

In 1949 Hutzlers owned the property at the southeast corner of Joppa Road and Dulaney Valley Road. It is designated “X” on the plat. Additionally, it held under long term leases the 20 acre tract, owned by Goucher College, consituting the balance of the land shown on the plat. On 17 August 1949 Hutzlers, Goucher College, Baltimore County and the State Roads Commission entered into an elaborate agreement, the substance of which, as far as we are concerned here, is as follows :

1. Flutzlers agreed to build a department store on its property and to develop the Goucher property as a regional shopping center with a number of individual stores and a common parking lot.
2. Baltimore County and the State Roads Commission agreed to allow Hutzlers to use the space under Joppa Road as *230 a part of its store so that pedestrians could “freely move from the proposed parking lot on the Goucher property to the basement of Hutzlers’ property and vice versa, and thereby avoid crossing Joppa Road.”
3. Hutzlers agreed to build a bridge to support Joppa Road so as to make possible the proposed use.
4. Hutzlers stated its intention to develop its property and the “Goucher property into stores and a shopping center” to be known as “Towson Plaza.”
5. Hutzlers agreed to maintain certain areas, including the place where this accident occurred.

Mrs. Taylor fell at the top of the stairway (S on the plat) at the corner of Joppa and Dulaney Valley Roads. The stairway had been installed to provide access from the parking area up to Dulaney Valley Road. Samuel Berryhill, Hutzlers’ maintenance supervisor for all suburban stores, testified that there once “was some discussion about putting a chain across that stairway and keeping pedestrians from using it.” This was discouraged by the man who was store manager at that time. His reason was that “people had to get down to the Plaza and it would be usable for them.” The present store manager, asked if he objected to the use of the stairway by persons who had been shopping at Towson Plaza, rather than Hutzlers, replied, “We exercise no restrictions [as] to that, sir.” In respect of any objection based on mercantile policy he said, “We all cater to the public, Mr. Iglehart.”

Albert Hutzler, Jr., at the time of trial, had been president of the company for about 12 years. In 1949 he was secretary. The primary reason for the stairway, he testified, was to enable people to get back to their cars on the parking lot when the store was closed. He stated that under the 1949 agreement with Goucher College “there can be nothing to impede customers from going between” Hutzlers and the shopping center. While the parking lot is for the benefit of Hutzlers’ customers he conceded that the store “cannot control the movement of every customer and [we] don’t want to, but we want to keep the parking lot as much as possible for” Hutzlers’ customers. (Emphasis supplied.) Some time after the opening of the store in 1952, Hutzlers added to the parking facilities by constructing an ele *231 vated parking deck (A B C D on the plat) over a part of the original parking area. One gains vehicular access to it from the lower level by means of a ramp. To reach Dulaney Valley Road, after parking on the elevated deck, it is necessary first to descend to the lower level and then climb the stairway (S on the plat).

Hutzlers’ lower level parking area, in addition to the area under the elevated parking deck, is indicated on the plat by the letters EFGHJ C. This area is maintained by Hutzlers. The balance is leased to Towson Plaza and is maintained by it. It will be observed that point G is but a few feet from the shopping center. There is no visible demarcation between Hutzlers’ area and the Towson Plaza area, unless “J” Road may be taken to be a dividing line. The entrance to the parking area from Dulaney Valley Road (J on the plat) is a 4 lane road (“J” Road). Mr. Berryhill agreed, as is obvious from the plat, that one entering at “J” and intending to shop at Towson Plaza would be on Plutzlers’ property whether he turned to the left or to the right to park unless, of course, all spaces were occupied, in which case the Towson Plaza area would have to be used.

On 13 August 1964 Mrs. Taylor was a 68 year old, 186 pound, twice-widowed former nurse who had been married to her present husband for about 2 years. A resident of Towson, she had been in England during July. Upon her return she went to Westminster, Maryland for a few days to attend a Quaker meeting. Around 11:00 A.M. she and her neighbor, Mrs. Wicks, set out for the shopping center in Mrs. Taylor’s car. She let Mrs. Wicks out near the Hutzlers corner so she could go to a bank nearby. She was to meet Mrs. Taylor at an optician’s office a few blocks further down the street. Mrs. Taylor, unable to find a place to park near the optician’s office, drove to the Towson Plaza parking lot. She parked her car on the upper level, descended the steps to the lower level, and then ascended the stairway (S on the plat) leading to Dulaney Valley Road. At the top of the stairway she stepped into a depression, turned her ankle and fell.

Both Mrs. Taylor and Mrs. Wicks were regular customers of Hutzlers. Both had charge plates. Mrs. Wicks said it was “one *232 of her favorite spots,” and that she did most of her shopping there. She and Mrs. Taylor shopped together “quite frequently,” at least once a week, sometimes twice a week. It was their intention, after leaving the optician’s office, to “do a little grocery shopping.” Mrs. Taylor wanted to go to the Food Fair (O on the plat). Mrs. Wicks preferred to shop for her groceries at the Acme about 3 to 4 blocks distant from Towson Plaza. Mrs. Wicks said she and Mrs. Taylor often went to Hutzlers for lunch. When they “were in the neighborhood” they would “go in Hutzlers and see what they had.” Mostly they looked at dresses. If Mrs. Taylor had not been injured "most likely [they] would have gone into the store.” (Emphasis supplied.) Mrs. Taylor said she shopped in Hutzlers about “twice a week.” She was “always looking for wedding presents” and “always looking in the art department and at dresses.” Whenever she wanted to go from the lower level to Dulaney Valley Road she usually went into the store and used the escalator. She recalled using the stairway “three or four times.” When she had done so was not made clear.

There was nothing to prevent her from seeing what was in front of her, Mrs. Taylor conceded, but she “didn’t see” the depression.

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Bluebook (online)
230 A.2d 663, 247 Md. 228, 1967 Md. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutzler-bros-v-taylor-md-1967.